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Dracula's Crypt - Bram Stoker, Irishness, and the Question of Blood (Hardcover, New)
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Dracula's Crypt - Bram Stoker, Irishness, and the Question of Blood (Hardcover, New)
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Dracula's Crypt unearths the Irish roots of Bram Stoker's gothic
masterpiece, offering a fresh interpretation of the author's
relationship to his novel and to the politics of blood that
consumes its characters. An ingenious reappraisal of a classic
text, Dracula's Crypt presents Stoker's novel as a subtly ironic
commentary on England's preoccupation with racial purity. Probing
psychobiographical, political, and cultural elements of Stoker's
background and milieu, Joseph Valente distinguishes Stoker's
viewpoint from that of his virulently racist, hypermasculine
vampire hunters, showing how the author's dual Anglo-Celtic
heritage and uncertain status as an Irish parvenu among London's
theatrical elite led him to espouse a progressive racial ideology
at odds with the dominant Anglo-Saxon supremacism. In the light of
Stoker's experience, the shabby-genteel Count Dracula can be seen
as a doppelganger, an ambiguous figure who is at once the
blood-conscious landed aristocrat and the bloodthirsty foreign
invader. Stoker also confronts gender ideals and their
implications, exposing the "inner vampire" in men like Jonathan
Harker who dominate and absorb the women who become their wives.
Ultimately, Valente argues, the novel celebrates a feminine
heroism, personified by Mina Harker, that upholds an ethos of
social connectivity against the prevailing obsession with blood as
a vehicle of identity. Revealing a profound and heretofore
unrecognized ethical and political message, Dracula's Crypt
maintains that the real threat delineated in Dracula is not racial
degeneration but the destructive force of racialized anxiety
itself. Stoker's novel emerges as a powerful critique of the very
anxieties it has previously been taken to express: anxieties
concerning the decline of the British empire, the deterioration of
Anglo-Saxon culture, and the contamination of the Anglo-Saxon race.
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